tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13017532101002554162024-03-05T11:11:43.714+01:00NOT A TEA-PARTYThomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.comBlogger53125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-3890520538119746382014-10-07T13:27:00.003+02:002014-10-07T14:14:56.954+02:00Ironman Barcelona - 9h03m on home turf<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Best race mates singing in the rain , Guille & Toni!!! Oleee!</td></tr>
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This would be the 6th time I started here in Calella - actually each year since 2009, when I raced the first edition of the Half Distance. I train here a lot - I love the flat bike course, which can (and ended up being) fast on a calm day.<br />
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However - the day started really ugly. Big dark clouds lured over Calella and I could already see the flashes of lightning over the mountains while getting out of bed. Around an hour before the Pro-start, the clouds gave in like an overfilled water-balloon bursting, and poured a massive amount of water over us - big flashes over the ocean and it definitely looked like at least the swim would be cancelled. Waiting 30 minutes brought us good news - the thunder-gods was taking a rain-check (excuse the very lame pun) and hence, we could start.<br />
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Got in the first line of the swim and made it fine around in a bit more than 59 minutes - the water was a bit choppy, but not too bad. I guess there was a bit of current against us on the long stretch and the official measure says 3900m. My age-group wave started way behind in the backseat, so we had quite a bit of hurdles, blue hats, white hats, breast strokers to overcome, with around 2000 swimmers in front of us.<br />
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The heavy rain stopped, but the bike circuit was still wet and we had to slow down a lot in the many (40) roundabouts, but apart from that, the legs felt very good and I quickly found the right goal watts. I train a LOT on this circuit, so I know well how and how much. The sky cleared, the wind was not too bad and the sun started drying up the fast, clean tarmac - just tucking into a good position, pushing, feeling good.<br />
Passing lots of bikes and turning in Montgat, I was close to 41 km per hour after the first 70km - the average power was still spot on, with a slight tailwind - so things were going down as expected. I feared that I would get caught up in one of the massive pelotons, which at times can at time get formed at this race. In all fairness, I can't see how you can completely avoid bikes getting too close in this race - but I would say that the folks that I was riding with, was keeping a fair distance. Pushing through to a 4h34m bike which is a personal best on this distance.<br />
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Out on the run, the legs feel pretty good too as expected. I kicked off with good cadence and had to hold back, as I was moving around 4:15 on the first 8-10 km. Slowed down and hit the target at 4:20 until 15 km. But from here, a mental struggle started. The old belly start to cramp a bit and I quickly found myself in a quite negative mental state - motivation was really low. I slowed down to a safer pace around 4:30 and kept a good intake going, but shortly after I succumbed to the first of many breaks of walking. Frankly legs were fine - but I was digging a mental hole for me myself, deeper and deeper for each step.<br />
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It would be easy to conclude that I pushed too hard on the bike, but riding at an intensity factor of only around 72% and VI of 1.04 would suggest, that I was on the safe side for a good run. But the tummy and and old head wanted something, so just tried to make it through around 4:45 or a bit slower to the end, running in around 3:25. All in all finishing with a PR at 9h03m30s and an 11th place iny AG. Overall times were very fast I'd say, we were lucky with the wind on the bike.<br />
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No Kona slots for 11th place. First they cut one slot in my AG (to 7 instead of 8) - then it rolled all the way down to 10th place, who finished 2 minutes in front of me. That'll teach me to consider if walking during an Ironman is clever ... But hey - fair game! Missing Kona must be a first world problem, eh?<br />
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Thanks to all who cheered and support onsite and online!<br />
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Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-74162743524875356452014-07-08T09:41:00.002+02:002014-07-08T10:33:50.195+02:00Ironman Frankfurt vs. Thomas Rohde: 2-0<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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So its been almost 10 months since last full distance race in Kona, Hawaii. During spring I have raced 2 half distances races with limited success, but the feelings and numbers leading into Ironman Frankfurt this year were actually better than ever. I raced in <a href="http://no-teaparty.blogspot.com.es/2012/07/after-rain-come-sun-ironman-frankfurt.html" target="_blank">Frankfurt back in 2012</a> also - where the rain got the better of me and I can say that Frankfurt still owes me a perfect day. But this being my 12th Ironman race, I have sort of settled with at least one conclusion: There are NO perfect days in Ironman, no tea-parties - you can be top-prepared and you can still get humbled. But hey - you learn and come out stronger.<br />
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Leading into this race, most conditions were very fine. I had trained very stable and steady and have good improvements to tighten up running, biking 10-12 watts harder than in 2013, coming fine back into swimming after Kona and race weight was on par.<br />
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After the last 2-3 longer running sessions (around 23-25k) I was a bit indecisive on my choice of race shoes for the run. For at least 2 years I have had smaller issues with <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morton's_neuroma" target="_blank">Morton's Neuroma</a> in both feet - a result of running with elastic shoe laces. Just 10-12 days out from race day, I ran with massive pains after running in my race shoes, either came home with the very light Asics DS Racer or the bit more padded Brooks PureCadence. Eventually I took some anti-inflammatorics the week up to the race, and decided to go with the Asics DS racer.<br />
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On race day things were calm. I started with the 300 best age groupers and had a fairly OK swim, but quite a few unexpected fights in the water. Felt the swim was long, maybe 4000-4100, so exiting in 1h02m was actually not that bad. Most good AGs had a longer swim time, maybe around 2-3 minutes longer.<br />
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The bike was great - I quickly founds my goal watts, settled well and kept going conservatively around 15 watts below optimal/hardest possible IM watts. I figured I could still do around 37 km/h which would give me a good time around 4h50m and then have good legs to run well and easy in maybe around 3h20m. The cut for Kona Qualification would be around 9h30m.. A bit more wind on the 2nd loop and I entered T2 in 4h53m, so if I could just run at 5:00 min/km Kona was absolutely still in scope - so far, so good.<br />
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As expected, my legs felt really fine at the start of the run, running steady around 4:30, but I immediately felt the pain in both feet. Took some ibuprofen almost straight after leaving T2, which initially calmed the pain, but still, each step was like stepping on small nails and it became more and more painful, but still bearable.<br />
The heat was really on now, maybe around 34-35 degrees and the sun was blazing. I tried to find shadow, cool down with ice, water - still hydrating well, keeping up a fine pace.<br />
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At around km 15 I decided to walk trough the next aid station to get plenty fluids. Started to feel really dizzy and had to stop completely and hold on to a pole for some seconds to remain standing - that was NOT good. Drinking and go back to running OK, but really fast started fainting. I must admit this was a horrible dejavu from Kona and I kinda lost my motivation right there too - I was falling apart, now both feet and my head was a mess.<br />
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I think I made it sort of running/walking/stopping to hydrate to around 25km where I was fairly confident that DNF was the only option left, - the bad memory of my <a href="http://no-teaparty.blogspot.com.es/2011/05/ironman-st-george-mormon-waterloo.html" target="_blank">only Ironman DNF in St. George</a> in 2010 got me going - walking mostly, talking with other athletes, made quite a number of new friends walking/jogging/suffering. Passed good people cheering and cheered back. I turn off my GPS and just decided to make it to the f**king line - Kona was out of the question for this one. Eventually made it around in something like 10h16m. No complaints - tough day, everybody suffered on that run.<br />
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It was amazing to be with so many friends in Frankfurt. Some cheered, some raced hard, some suffered, some became <a href="http://oobcoaching.dk/blog/euroobamestrene-fra-ironman-european-championchip-frankfurt-2014/" target="_blank">European Champions</a> - but you all reminded me once again, how much I love to be part of this great sport and family. Thank you so much for a great time in Frankfurt!<br />
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Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-33992434584331849502013-10-15T23:12:00.000+02:002013-10-15T23:46:18.046+02:00Ironman Hawaii World Championship - The Two Sides of the Medal <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
I came to Hawaii with two main objectives; one was to finish the Ironman World Championship in the best possible way, and the second was to have the time of my life doing it. This past Saturday I fulfilled both and received a medal. Its like the two goals are represented well by the two sides of that medal. On one side, this was the hardest thing I have ever experienced and on the other side, this was one of the best and most amazing days of my life.<br />
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Let's get to it:<br />
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<b>The hard side - the boring, cold facts you will find in any old race report: </b><br />
I think it is almost impossible to describe in words, what Ironman Hawaii really is. Its a monster - something so much harder than any other Ironman races or anything else, I have ever experienced. I frankly did not expect it to be so hard - but as my friend says; There is really NOWHERE to find forgiveness during the race ANYWHERE or at ANY time. You swim with no wet suit in the toughest pack in the world - everybody are good swimmers, hence almost every is swimming within 10 minutes, which obviously means everybody is in the same place at the same time. The bike is so darn hot. humid and grueling - the headwind coming back from Hawaii hit me like a hammer, made me dizzy and feeling really sick and with no power. Then the marathon - well the first 15 km are fine, but when all the glamour of the world elite, all the sponsor banners, all the loud inspiring musics starts to fade out behind you - you need to pass through a hot agonizing 42km long, hot asphalt road on top of a lava field, which is essentially draining your energy step by step.<br />
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Just before entering the water, I find Guillermo and we give each other a last big hug - I look at the 2000 people already floating in the water, then make my way to the front of the line. Few minutes later, the canon is off and the race is on. I quickly settle in a good pace, enjoying the scenery, but there are a lot of fights - I have many people swim on top of me, pulling me down and I seek a bit further to the left - however this does not really help a lot. Looking at ocean floor is like a giant fish tank and time passes quickly until the turn point at the Body Glove catamaran. I have seen this so many times on TV - its truly insane to be here. Coming back is a bit slower, things calm down slightly but I manage to swallow quite a bit of pacific ocean, which potentially sets of the first stomach issues.<br />
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Reaching the pier, I go far enough right, so when I stand up in the shallow water I get a good look at the whole scenery. Running up the red carpet stairs, picking the green clean water hoses and running easy to pick up my bag and find the bike - not big deal, I am just freaking out, being part of this.<br />
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On the bike, things seems calmer and easier than expected - a bit conservatively, I aim towards 205 watts, which is some 15 watts below par and what I pushed just 6 weeks ago in Copenhagen. I want to be certain to have enough energy to manage to finish strong on the run. At least that WAS the plan. Once on the Queen K highway, we have a slight tailwind and there are huge amounts of riders on the road - its practically impossible to avoid getting caught up in smaller groups, but I try my very best to keep the 7 m - the refs here are notoriusly rough. My tummy is troubling me and I try to calm it be sipping water at each aid station, which works a bit and for the first 100km I am kinda OK - tailwind and 33 degrees. How bad can it be?<br />
On the way up Hawii, we see the first pros coming down at full throttle. Jacobs, Van Lierde, Kienle, Crowie - all big guns and big heroes.<br />
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At around on 195w I reach Hawi with an average of around 38 km/h, thinking "this is so much easier than I thought" - n ow its just getting down this hill and then 70km home - piece of cake. I guess those could be famous last words, cos right at that moment, the headwind is back, but now mad hard. With the heat and humidity, it hits like a hammer - I try to stay on watts, but I am fading. I am getting passed by many, many bikes - I can't even maintain aero position and I am feeling so sick that I am about to throw up at every sip of water or energy that I am trying to take in. The last hills back into Kona is taking the best of me and I am starting to consider how on earth am I going to run a marathon now. Later on in the day, while picking up my bike, I find out that I had a flat front tire - potentially this has slowed me down, but I did not even notice. I spent all my energy just to pedal to get back to T2.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">I guess my face expression here says it all ... dead meat!</td></tr>
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Off the bike I must have looked like an old man. Everything hurts - back, legs, stomach cramps - I could frankly hardly walk. Taking my time in T2, my feet are wet and already looking like raisins, but I do not have any spare socks. Coming out of the transition is like a dream. Although I am so dizzy and nausea, there is a huge crowd cheering and I manage to walk/run for the first 2-3 km and then starts to get the running going. But its hard - very, very hard. The heat is hammering down with the blazing sun, the humidity is furious. Strangely enough my legs are kinda OK - maybe because I am moving at a record-slow 10 km/h. But hey, this is IT - the World Championship- this is Ali'I Drive! Come ON - only 40 km left... GOD!!! My feet starts hurting too, from a number of massive blister. Post-race I drained 12 of them - so no wonder I felt like walking on heated charcoal. I never realized how hilly this run is - there are no times during the marathon where its flat. All the time up and down - and even if I had the ability to find a "rythm" at this time, it would get spoiled by the changes in terrain.<br />
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Out on Queen K its gets silent - runners are suffering just like myself or even more. I see many throwing up, some quitting. I manage to make it to the Energy Lab - the infamous stretch some 15 km from the finish line. Now I know I will finish, though my motivation hits an all-time low. I keep running/walking at around 5:50 min/km, but slowly fading. The last 10 km is just survival. Every time I stop to walk, I am so dizzy and nausea that my legs are literally trembling. Running is so painful, due to the blisters - I think I am down to 6:30 - its slow, but I am progressing. The last mile feels very, very long. You can see and hear the finish line, but we are being led in a loop down back on Ali'i, before coming into the famous finish line area.<br />
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I slow down, the crowd is mad here, literally 100s of high fives, people screaming - and then at 10:49 the voice of Mike Rilley "Thomas Rohde - You are an IRONMAN" - what a great feeling... at least for a few seconds.<br />
Just over the line I am being picked up by 2 volunteers, I get to sit down in the grass and chat with a few friends, but I am not good. I find my way back to the medical tent, get assistance and starts throwing up. I am almost 5kg from my weight this morning, so massively under-hydrated, thought I have been drinking very well all day. I get to lie down and the medics decide to put me in intravenous rehydration, pumping some 2 liters of salt water into my left arm. After 2 hours or so, I start feeling better, get some color back in my face and feeling back into my legs and (partly) my feet. Its over - I made it, goal achieved. Ironman Hawaii 2013.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Officer down - 2 hours with IV regaining body fluids</td></tr>
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<b>Probably one of the best days I have ever lived, since the 26th of June 1992:</b><br />
Hawaii is amazing - simply amazing. We have been here for a week now and its people and nature is beyond anything I have experienced elsewhere. Its so good, it actually makes me wonder, why other places in the world cannot be like this. With a more simple, clean life, good spirits and karma, with less Facebook, camera phones, compression socks and Ironman race reporting...<br />
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On the morning of the 26th of June 1992, I had just turned 18 and I had my final exam for my driving licence - a big day indeed. Nervous, but I passed it fine and from here on, this day went ballistic. First, around noon, I went to Roskilde Festival for the very first time - met all my mates, then we saw my favorite band Pearl Jam perform. Then Denmark played Germany in the Football Eurocup and won, setting the whole country on fire in a spree of happiness - and ending this day, we saw Nirvana perform and then goodnight. Probably the best day of my life period. Until this past Saturday in Kona that is.<br />
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Since we arrived to Kona, we could definitely feel the strong vibe of the Ironman. Circus was in town. Everywhere you see 6-packed, sharply shaven athletes, some well into the 50s or 60s, most with a fat% well under 8%. Frankly, I quickly found this a bit absurd - way too much and too cliche for the sport of triathlon. But apart from that the World Championship is everything I had ever dreamed of. The day was hard indeed, but I enjoyed it the best I could, through the dizziness, nausea and bleeding feet.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Hank Schrader - init ??</td></tr>
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Great highlights includes the bike check in, where when I realized how small the pier really is and the place is full of the world elite. Then the swim in the fish tank and getting out of the water, looking at the scenery unfolding. The Hawaiian people supporting us with Alohas and cheers, the kids and parents helping out on the aid stations - so happy to help, though the sun must have been burning them too. The run on Queen K, much harder than I imagined, but what an experience to be here and be part of it. Being passed by elderly runners here, who have the strength to even get here and then they cheer you going "you can do it" - I have so much respect for these men and women who keep coming back here to race well into their 70s. On the podium during the award banquet, was a cute woman at 77 years old, who finished well in a bit more that 16 hours and was determined to come back next year. I have seen this on video, but seeing her live here made me realize how strong the body and mind is and how well one can grow old in a healthy matter, if you take care of yourself. Much respect for these folks.<br />
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Eventually, just a big amount of thanks to all of the people who have cheered and supported me on this long journey. De Soto Sports, Triatech, OOB Coaching, Argon 18 Bikes, Fit4Bike, I AM ID, SIS Nutrition - thanks a bunch. A special thanks to three persons who especially walk an extra mile for me:<br />
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Guillermo Lladó - as a mentor and helped spawning the initial spark to actually do this. Have survived countless kilometers of biking with me on his tail, so much bullshit about watts, tyres and what not. Taught me to push hard, showed me the ropes in Ironman, as well as taking me in as a friend.<br />
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Aleksandar Sørensen-Markovic - my friend, coach and colleague. Pushed my limits in training and in life, making me believe that I actually could realize that major turn in my career - most likely one of the most daring and best things I have ever done. Without your support, guidelines and confirmation that this was indeed possible, I doubt this dream would ever become real. <br />
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Blanca Martí - my love and biggest support every day. Always there for me with sweetness, words of comfort, soothing hands on my sore legs. I love you - you are the best thing that ever happened to me.<br />
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Now its time for a bit of relax, surf and good food - enjoying another week of experiencing Big Island. Mahalo to you all !!!<br />
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Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-81254555830264061182013-09-25T14:54:00.001+02:002013-09-25T18:44:28.182+02:00Goal achieved - now what?<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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Three years ago, in the beginning of 2011, I set myself a goal. After going sub10 in Ironman Copenhagen and running sub3 hours in The Sebastian Marathon, both in 2010, I gathered enough confidence and forged the idea of qualifying for the Ironman World Championship in Hawaii. I even went public with this dream - a daring thing to do in a world with social media full of "naysayers"<br />
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Initially it seemed a fair goal, I would need to shave off some 20-30 minutes of my 9:52 from 2010 Ironman Copenhagen time - a bit of tuning on the swim, improve my bike further and then learn to actually run well, without getting either sick or run out of juice. Easy, right?<br />
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Not so much so! Happily I embarked a journey with my good friend and mentor, Guillermo towards Ironman St. George, to take place in May 2011. The training sessions for this race were the longest, hardest and most tiring I have ever done, and they left me vastly over-trained. We both had a tough race and eventually had to pull out after the bike, just too sick to continue a tough and hot run. I had Ironman Zurich as back-up, but already going into this race I had a wake-up call, then I realized the the qualifiers in my age group, were as fast as 9:15 on a course which is somewhat harder than Copenhagen. In Zurich, a referee made a mistake and disqualified me - so 2011 was definitely not my year. However - I learned many new things - especially that Hawaii qualification is definitely not a walk in the park!<br />
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In autumn 2011 however, I initiated a much better planning with Aleksandar and Out of Bubblegum, which also was the beginning of some major changes in my life and career. With a little help from my friends, I got an entry to Ironman Frankfurt 2012, which would be my A-race for qualification the same year. It seemed reasonably easy with 100 Hawaii slots. I would need to go around 9:25 on a course which is not too hard - this could actually work. Training in spring 2012 went really well - I learned a lot and improved a bunch in all 3 sports. Come race day, I felt great - it was pouring down for 5 hours on the bike and after two hard crashes on the bike and a flat at km 175 - my chances were down to almost zero, so just jogged it home and missed the cut with around 15 minutes. However, at the end of the 2012 season I<b> did</b> get a confirmation, that my new training regime with OOB had been fruitful, as I (slightly under-trained) finished Challenge Barcelona in 9:23 and to my surprise won the Spanish Age Group Championship.<br />
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I kept the stove cooking at a fairly high heat during the autumn months and into spring 2013 - with a new A-goal to go under 9 hours in KMD Ironman Copenhagen in August, but along the way, stamp the ticket to Kona at Ironman Coeur d'Alene in Idaho, USA. Racing Half IMs well in March in Malaga and in May in Calella gave me a new, good sensation and confidence, that the goal was indeed within reach. The preparations for IM Coeur d'Alene were close to optimal in terms of training and resting, but on race day heavy cramps on basically all 42 km of the run, left me 2. places at only 6 minutes from qualification. So, at that moment I was really already looking at qualifying races in 2014. The "oh-how-easy" goal of reaching the Big Island in Hawaii seemed to be a fair bit harder than I had initially ever imagined.<br />
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This was indeed new for me. In most aspects of my life, be it love, career or sports, reaching my goals has always come fairly easy to me. Frankly, I don't think I have <b>ANY </b>more talent than anybody else, but I am born with a nerd-like curiosity, a massive natural-energy engine and some ability to focus a bit for limited amounts of time. Since I was a kid, I would pick up something new, like sports-fishing, playing electric guitar or what not - spend ALL my time reading books, magazines and practicing until all god-damn aspects of the theme had been explored in depth and I my parents had gone mad. I guess skateboarding taught me to practice on my own and remain persistent towards learning new stuff - you land tricks or you immediately pay a ticket in terms of pain. It really hurts to learn to become a good skateboarder.<br />
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Qualifying for Kona was becoming the hardest target I had ever tried to hit. But it was not time to put down the arms now, but rather aim and fire again.<br />
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I was already registered for what was then Challenge Copenhagen - where I still had a hope to go below the 9 hours. During the summer however, this race got bought by the Ironman organization, WTC. What a pleasant surprise, when we all realized that the Copenhagen race (against all odds) now indeed offered 50 Hawaii slots for 2013.<br />
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The weeks leading into KMD Ironman Copenhagen, I was training very hard in the Catalan heat, had time to relax and recover - I was focused, motivated, but relaxed. I guess this is the right feeling before an important race - something I had never felt before. Even on race day, standing at the swim start, I felt a massive confidence. I knew I had to go close to or under 9 hours to pick one of the 6 slots in my age group, but both Aleksandar and Vladimir had given me a firm confirmation, that this was indeed realistic, if things would unfold the right way during the day.<br />
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And so they did! I frankly do not recall much from the last 20 km on the run, but I just dug in and kept it at 4:30 min/km as planned, which eventually got me through in 9:04 - exactly a 6th place and almost certainly a slot for Kona, which got confirmed the next day, thanks god!<br />
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The next few days and weeks were full of travelling to Vietnam with Blanca - what an amazing place. I needed loads of rest and the jet-lag made me sleep badly for a week or so and my legs were swollen from the long flight.<br />
I was indeed nice to be far away from my bike and just do other things - no focus on training, pace or watts. I started realizing what I had achieved and how long I had been pursuing this goal, neglecting many other things - and the first thoughts leading to this blog-post started to take shape.<br />
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I got in a few run- and swim sets in Vietnam, though the sun was blazing hot and the humidity and pollution was overwhelming. Back in Barcelona, I got back on the bike and the first thing that struck me was that I really didn't miss my wheels that much. Legs were still really tired and I guess I was just a culmination of many things coming together - things coming to a pleasant end. Many months of hard concentrated training and many races with no real breaks. I feel a bit like a car, that has been driving hard uphill for at long time, that was now on the flat, rolling at a steady pace, but in the neutral gear.<br />
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But slowly I have been coming back - better and better, week by week. More motivated. I can't say that I am looking much forward to another agonizing day, at what is know to be by far the hardest Ironman. Period. At least in terms of heat and humidity. Big Island on Hawaii has been known for close to 40 degrees and humidity well above 80%. But indeed I am looking forward to the trip and going to have this amazing experience, travelling with my mate Anders AKA Coco Lopez. Also racing in a World Championship, in the great nature, with friends, colleagues and with the best in the world - it will be an insane experience.<br />
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Let's see what will be next. Definitely 2014 will be a busy year for OOB Coaching and I am very excited to take part in this - there will be many good challenges and many days travelling to Denmark and around the world. Also, I want to get back to the mountains and climb - preferably in my favorite corner of Catalunya, secret little gem Val d'Aran with my mates there. I miss skateboarding and snowboarding - its feels like ages since have been surfing too. But Ironman will most likely always have a big role in my life - and so it will in 2014. Will keep you posted - stay tuned :) <br />
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Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-51635343687206136372013-08-22T04:54:00.000+02:002013-08-22T05:21:30.398+02:00KMD Ironman Copenhagen - Kona Bound! <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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So, after IM Couer d'Alene and the cramp-hell on the marathon, I was very pleased to learn that while OOB's partner YWC got bought by WTC (Ironman Corporation), this meant that already from this year, the new KMD Ironman Copenhagen would have 50 slots for Kona - the World Championship in Hawaii. Racing on home turf was already in scope and I could hardly have dreamt of a better setting to finally stamp the ticket to the Big Island in Copenhagen, with friends and family cheering all day.<br />
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The 5-6 weeks leading up to the race, was probably the hardest period I have ever come through training-wise. First off, the mayor business projects in OOB that kept me busy during time had been concluded succesfully. Hence, I had more time to train and focus. Further, training in Barcelona in July & August, means that temperatures are brutal around 35-40 degrees and humidity was insane - so even a brief jog was a mean source of dehydration, not to speak of the long bike rides, bound to collide with the mid-day blaze from the sun. I kept a steady training volume and high intensity, but most weeks summarized well above 22-24 hours, swimming more than ever and getting really comfy running hard for longer periods of time, than ever before.<br />
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Come race day, a bit of sun, but mostly cloudy and some rain. The amazing in-sea lagune was all calm as always, water temp fair around 20 degrees and the wind was indeed present (breeze) but from a good and fast direction.<br />
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I am beginning to realize that this is the beginning, not only of a great race, but also the best day in my professional life. OOB has almost 90 athletes racing today and I am accountable for coaching and helping close to 30 of these in their preparations for this (for many their first) Ironman race - needless to say, its a immense joy to see the nervous smiles of the team and pass on some confidence and calm words that its gonna be all fine.<br />
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Find the front line with OOB colleague Vladimir, who I knew would be a pair of fast feet in the water. From the start I felt really well and that I could push hard (though I lost Vladimir quite early) all the way through the swim. All time best swim in a bit more than 57 minutes, which is what I hoped for so happy with that.<br />
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The organization of KMD Ironman Copenhagen is fantastic and flawless - simply <b>everything</b> is in its right place for optimal race conditions.<br />
Currently biking through central Copenhagen is a bit dogdy - many road constructions, patches on the tarmac, enormous potholes, but its invaoidable as Copenhagen is being dug up these years with the construction of a new Metro line. And its just a few kilometers, so once out on the road leading north, I have a fairly strong tailwind, hitting some 42-44 km/h and I am passing 5-6 bikes until I am quite alone.<br />
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For the remainder of the bike, I am almost all the time riding solo, execept for Irish Martin, who I switch places with a few times during the 180km, but not really enough to benefit from the same pace, so I just stick the the plan and 220 watts. Though the weather is not just top-fine for Danish August there are still thousands of Danes cheering on the roads and of course seeing my whole family, friends and Coach Aleksandar on Geels Bakke is a real boost. Enter Copenhagen a to the roar of the massive crowd at T2 after 4h50m on the bike - some 10 minutes of par, mostly due to a strong head-wind that has picked up in the later ours of the bike leg.<br />
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The run is simply just unrealistic, fantastic - 200.000 people are cheering on the 4 loops in the center of the Capital. Seeing so many known (and unknown) faces, shouting my name & cheering is undescribable, I will never forget. I know my swim better than ever and I know I had a good bike split to, so definitely hope to be in top5 in my age group at this moment in time. Around km 5 I see Blanca and Anders who gives me the first real update on standings in my group and at this moment in time I am 10th. Normally I will loose a at least a handful of places, as there are stronger runners who will go below 3h10m for the marathon - so my first thought is "no way Hawaii is realistic now" - there is initially only 6 slots in my group, so I need to place in top6 to be sure to qualify. However I am running fine at 4:30 and I decide to just do my best to keep that pace, first until 10 km, then to 20 km and the eventually keeps this pace all the way during the day. Along the way I sometimes pass other participants in my group, and other times I get passed. To be honest, I kinda loose track of counting - I am dizzy and I just push to stay on pace. Again, its a great motivation and joy to see friends and athletes running well on the course and giving my feedback that they too are having a great day in Copenhagen.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">OOB/Irunmen's Kasper Ougaard exhausted on the floor after a tough race. <br />
My legs looks like a mess as always... </td></tr>
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Blanca, Anders and colleauges Aleksandar & Morten are great helping on splits and I advance to 8th then 7th. Eventually, around km 34, I have only 30 seconds to number 5 in front of me, where he stays until the end. So I secure the 6th place with 3h11m on the run and greatest feeling of accomplishment ever in an Ironman race, an all-time best at 9h04m. Vladimir enters some 8 minutes in front of me in 4th - so, so good. There is great rejoice in the post-race area with all our friends and atletes coming over the line.<br />
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I feel like this was a very well-balanced race, especially on the run, where things worked so much better than in Couer d'Alene or ever before. Eventually both Vladimir, myself and more than 6 other OOB athletes qualified for Kona on this fine sunday. <a href="http://oobcoaching.dk/blog/oob-coachings-resultater-ved-kmd-ironman-copenhagen-2013/" target="_blank">Read all OOBs stats from IM CPH here: </a><br />
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Thanks to all who cheered and those who supported me; <a href="http://www.desotosport.com/" target="_blank">De Soto Sports</a>, <a href="http://www.triatech.es/" target="_blank">Triatech</a>, <a href="http://www.oobcoaching.dk/" target="_blank">OOB Coaching</a>, <a href="http://www.argon18bike.com/" target="_blank">Argon 18 Bikes</a>, <a href="http://www.fit4bike.com/" target="_blank">Fit4Bike</a>, <a href="http://imyourid.com/es/view/products/i_am_active" target="_blank">I AM ID</a>, <a href="http://www.alpcross.com/" target="_blank">SIS Nutrition </a><br />
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Wish y'all a good recovery. Love fron Hanoi, Vietnam! </div>
Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-70639304411932566492013-06-25T16:36:00.000+02:002013-06-25T17:40:49.542+02:00Ironman Coeur d'Alene - tough one, even for Murphy!<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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First off - how great is the people of America! Never have I met such good people everywhere! From just people on the streets, our hotel staff, the volunteers and the crowds cheering us on the race. Everybody has been so great hosts and representing this nation and region in the best possible way, everywhere! Coeur d'Alene, Idaho.- thanks! A lot!!! </div>
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So after a long lonely flight to Seattle, I met up with my good friends Karen & Ulrik - sweet company! Just though my bike was lost again (3rd time this year??) but apparently just issues with US customs. Eventually the little fellowship was on the road, heading to little Coeur d'Alene - a 5 hour drive west into deep Idaho.</div>
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Five good (but wet), relaxed days just to focus and prepare - just ideal preps for this race, my 10th Ironman.</div>
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On race day the forecast was fair, the water was coldish, but the swim course looked amazing. I was right in the front line of this rolling start, where your own timing only starts when you enter the water - smart way to get people more relaxed and ease the fight in the water. Still though, had a rough start and came around in 1h02m a bit slower than expected, but I can see that quite few age groupers were below 60m, so the swim may have been a wee long. </div>
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Good feelings on the bike over rolling highway hills, a few harder, short climbs - in the end around 1600m of climbing, so just a bit less than e.g. Ironman France. Felt really good all the way through and kept well to my goal strategy watt-wise. </div>
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Mechanically the bike leg was a nightmare. Unbelievable that I have such bad luck, as I really feel I prepare the bike really well. First, problems with the front shifter had me climbing the fist hills on the big ring (would have made Sr. Lladó proud here, eh?). Second, the Di2 shifter on the aerobar got loose. Fiddling with that I went over the groves in the side of the road. Result: EVERYTHING ejected from the bike, bottles, gels and ... yes, again my SRM power meter computer. So had to stop and go back after that. During the last 20 miles or so, I even realized that I had been riding semi-flat on the rear wheel - not sure for how long... I peed 4-5 times on the bike - I was leaking like a river! </div>
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Murphy was really in that mood on Sunday! </div>
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Anyway - eventually riding happy, fueling well in the sun, no wind and with good feelings in 5h08m slightly better than expected! Spot on 222 watts in Normalized power and pushing 288 TSS, which again is a good number, to run well off an IM bike.<br />
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Filled up my De Soto race suit with the needed gels and started the run with really good feelings. Here is why racing with a power meter, riding a bit more conservatively on the hills had a good effect. Easily kept my goal pace at 4:30 but 3 km into the run, something happened that I haven't experienced for 3-4 years now. A massive cramp hit my left rear thigh. I was like getting a BIG nail hammered in and my first thought was indeed "Game Over". A few salt tablets, started walking and slowly came back into running. Felt OK so pushed back to around 4:40 then to 4:30 ... all fine... then OUCH: Right rear thigh now had the second nail - came back running again, but from thereon it was just pure agony. For something like 33 km I was running with constant (though bearable) cramps everywhere in my legs, thighs, quads, calves and eventually even my arms.<br />
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Never experienced anything like this! Even now, two days post-race, my jaws are aching from gritting my teeth so hard - not cool at all. The last 5 miles was run/walk and finally made it to the last 1000m stretch of downhill, which were amazing. The roar of the crowd made me give in to a few tears (mostly from pain I guess) and made it through in 3h26m - my best IM run ever on a hilly run course.</div>
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Again - thanks to all who wished us good luck and cheered. To the great folks we have met on this trip, to Karen & Ulrik for amazing company. And then to my collaborators & sponsors: <a href="http://www.desotosport.com/" target="_blank">De Soto Sports</a> & <a href="http://triatech.es/">Triatech.es</a> - the race suit really worked wonders, to <a href="http://www.argon18bike.com/" target="_blank">Argon 18</a>, <a href="http://imyourid.com/" target="_blank">I AM ID</a> and to <a href="http://oobcoaching.dk/" target="_blank">OOB Coaching</a>!<br />
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Next race will be Challenge Copenhagen the 18th August - stay tuned! </div>
Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-13448675024801996922013-05-24T10:24:00.001+02:002013-05-24T11:12:37.620+02:008th at European Championships - Challenge Calella Half Ironman Race Report<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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So, this was the 4th time I did this race - actually it was in Calella that I had my debut in triathlon. First, this race is now in a completely different ball-game. Everything has undergone so many improvements, which is just great. I love racing, but I am also always very critical on race organizations - but for this edition I can say, that it is now as close to a flawless as you can ever hope for. I frankly did not experience any annoyances or surprises in the race. Even the post-race buffet is like a 5-star hotel :)<br />
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The new bike circuit is out of this world - its effin hard, beautiful on the Montseny climbs and this really benefits lighter and stronger riders. I had dropped 3 kg after ICAN Malaga, getting just below 70kg. That along with an almost 10% improvement in my cycling tests (FTP) during the months of spring, had me hoping that the curse of being a better flat-circuit rider, than a climber, was over.<br />
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I was sporting a brand new <a href="http://www.triatech.es/es/forza-itu-trisuit-25.html" target="_blank">De Soto Forza ITU</a> race suit in order to be able to compete legally in the ETU European Championships. Triatech even helped me printing my name and country on the suit - thanks a bunch, Hector. The fabric and quality of the De Soto gear is amazing - light and firm. The "compression" actually gave me a very steady feeling, especially in my thighs while running. The suit has a good cycling pad. Its nice to just be able to pick a suit off the shelf, put it on and race for almost 5 hours without anything bother or chafing. Great stuff.<br />
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So, the Catalan waters were really misbehaving the days before the race - almost 2m waves were pounding the beaches and I <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0zGwdD6c_bo&feature=share" target="_blank">could feel people getting anxious</a> about the swim. On race morning the sea had calmed a bit, but still very choppy - especially sighting and drafting in the water was a nightmare. Got in the first line and was one of the first at the first turn. Lost orientation a bit and had to stop to get back on track. Frankly I didn't feel I had the best pace. A french guy punched me so hard in the back of the head, but he was nice and checked if I was ok and said sorry .. Finished fairly OK in 30 minutes, swallowed too much water and got into T1 kinda cold and nausea.<br />
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I was excited to get going on the bike - I had setup my <a href="http://www.argon18bike.com/" target="_blank">Argon 18 E118</a> with Zipp 808 front and back, whereas I saw some riding a disc here. Started getting comfy and pushed the planned 270 watts on the 3 climbs as planned, but I had to struggle a bit to maintain goal watts on the last climb. There was so much poplar fluff in the air, at times it looked like a snow-storm. I started feeling a bit of problems breathing - probably a bit of allergy or hay-fever.<br />
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Delivered the bike in T2 and felt ready to run. The run course is also updated, and we avoided the countryside, empty road that was dead boring in the previous editions of the race. I had been training really well, with many longer threshold sets the 4 weeks leading up to the race, after ICAN Malaga, where I ran in 4:05 min/km. I set off at 4:00 with the idea of dropping to 3:55, but quickly realized that this was not really an option. Legs actually felt quite good and even at 4:10 I passed many runners, who probably burned their legs on the bike. I had a bit of stomach cramps and every time I started pushing back closer to 4:00 I had problems breathing - probably my heart rate was going balistic. The last 7-8 km was pure survival and I dropped to running at 4:30-4:40 which is sub-par even for me. Finally did 4h47m and finished 8th in the European Championship - I guess I should be happy with that. However, I can see that I still need to work on hilly biking - I doubt I was even in top50 on the bike (compared to 2nd last year on the flat course) <br />
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Frankly it was amazing to race in Calella - I realize how lucky I am to know so many good people and being carried forward by the cheers of friends and having Blanca there was of course sweet <3<br />
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Coming up is the Ironman Couer d'Alene in Idaho, USA - the 23rd of June. </div>
Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-62664176096771753692013-05-16T07:51:00.000+02:002013-05-16T07:57:58.611+02:00New Collaboration with De Soto & Triatech.es<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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Happy to accounce the new collaboration with De Soto Sports and Triatech.es here in Spain. De Soto is a classic Californian brand with more than 20 years of history in the sports. I have been following the brand for long - the fabrics are top quality and the designs are really cool, almost with a classic Cali-surf style touch. </div>
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For 2013 I will be training and racing with De Soto apparal, starting this Sunday where I will be sporting the red Forza ITU Tri-suit as you can see in the photos here. But also the really sweet cycling gear. As my friend Doof says: "To wear a pink jersey, you need to be skinny, tanned and faster than most of the pack" </div>
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I will try my best to comply there Doof. Thanks</div>
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Check out www.desotosport.com and www.Triatech.es for good deals here in Spain</div>
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Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-14453307046080026602012-10-01T10:26:00.002+02:002012-10-01T10:29:23.679+02:00Personal Best on Ironman - finally nailed nutrition! <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
So here´s the race report from yesterday´s Ironman race in Calella. All in all, I am very happy and proud about my finish and personal best in 9h23m!<br />
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The weather looked horrible on Saturday as it was raining cats and dogs the full day, and OOB Coach and pro athlete, Jens PB and myself got wet feet while picking up race bags. Spent the Saturday meeting a bunch of good Danish people, helping them getting race ready, a good chat and had an early and good sleep.<br />
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Sunday morning was dry, as I picked up Blanca and we set forth through Barcelona´s Sunday-morning-streets full of drunk people. Its always an interesting contrast, when you consider what you COULD be doing on a Sunday morning - and though Ironman is a hard start on a Sunday, I have no doubt what I prefer at this moment in my life :)<br />
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My mood was good and I was relaxed - the pressure was somewhat off for this Ironman, but I was indeed motivated. The preparations had been sub-par with a bit of stomach flu in Cairo, loads of travels and no race bike for approx 3-4 weeks, due to a warranty change of the E-118.<br />
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The sewers in Calella had been flooding due to the heavy rain, which brought back memories of Challenge Copenhagen 2010. But appears the Mediterrean is so polluted anyway that nobody took notice. Came well of the beach and was between the first 10 to round the first buoy - no fights and had a good pace and good found feet to draft on most of the way, so finished in 1h02m in a swim which is known to be 2-3 minutes slower.<br />
<br />
Good transition and tucked well into aero-position, only to feel the consequences of not having my TT bike for the last few weeks - pains in shoulders and neck. My aim was 215 watts, which felt easy now and pushed by a few hundred bikes, happy about my new Zipp disc and wide front - no wind and around 90 km into the bike leg I averaged 38.7 km/h - fairly more than expected. The wind picked up, which sent me back to around 37.7 km/h. The Calella Challenge is known for intense drafting and this edition was no exception. Bikes like pearls on a string with 2-3 meters apart, makes it hard to pace well. Anywho, finished in Personal Best bike split at 4h48m - stomach and nutrition had been well, so felt good when running out to the marathon.<br />
<br />
A new (to me) strategy was to bring all my own nutrition for the 42.2 km run - which meant 8 GU gels or 200 grams of carbohydrates, a gel every 20 minutes or so. For the first time ever I had no GI problems so finally nailed this issue, that has been haunting and stopping me in every of the 7 other Ironman races before this one! I kept a steady pace of 4:40 until around 25km, which felt bearable. Around 30-32 km I started feeling somewhat tired but kept up as well as possible. I dropped my last to salt tablets just as I started feeling small cramps, but Jens was on the spot with a bucket of fast Saltstick tabs - all good. My homie Marc Lopez gave me splits and told me I was 3rd in the Age Group with 2 minutes up to number 2, which at that time felt impossble to push through. Pace fell to 4:45 and then at 36km I started getting in some more trouble, dizzy and hurting legs - but stayed around 5:00 for the last 5km and finished the marathon in 3:28 - probably loosing 10-12 minutes on the last 7-8km. But the closest I have ever come to a perfect execution on the mother of triathlon distances and as always, a bunch of new things learned.<br />
<br />
Cheers and thanks for checking in! Thomas<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br /></div>
Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-79608859025242826182012-07-09T09:22:00.001+02:002012-07-10T14:50:31.669+02:00After the rain comes sun! Ironman FrankfurtSo, I think its fair to say that preparations for this race was as close to perfect as it will ever get. Legs felt good and rested, mind felt positive and the days before the race I was just confident that the parameters that I could influence in preparations had been optimal. But as you know, this is not always the full equation in Ironman racing - I have all the respect in the world, to the outside parameters. And I am learning to improve how to cope with this in every training and every race i do. Ironman Frankfurt was about to becore a big lesson learned on this! <br />
<br />
The swim was amazing - dark clouds lured above us, the lake was hot (almost 24 degrees which is warm in a wetsuit). I started with the pros and 300 age groupers which was definitely an advantage. Not even one fight in the water, but I also had a hard time finding feet to draft on. Hence, ended up swimming most of the time by myself. Exiting the water, I was quite certain that I did not reach the expected goal of sub 60 minutes. Running in to T1 I asked a German about the time and he shouted "FIVE NINE" which made no sense to me until I was a few kilometers into the bike and saw that I had swam in 59.30 minutes - my best ever. <br />
<br />
Quickly found a good and planned pace of 218 watts on the bike, legs were on fire and I overtook many athletes going around 42 km/h on the flat first 30 km. Then came the rain ... and the wind. I recall the stings of raindrops hitting my arms, but it was quite "hyggelig" and still had a good time and kept pace well. Hitting the first cobble stones in a small village and had to hold on to everything, bottles and gels which were jumping up and down. Midway through this cobbled village, I realize in horror, that the screeen for my power meter is gone. Break and start to run a few 100 meters back and a nice lady had picked it up. Chain fell off. Shit! Back on the bike and I started regaining the lost terrain again. Rain now really got bad and for the first time ever, I had to pee badly - and so I did ... 5 times in all on the bike, like a race horse. Not a big issue as the rain quickly washed everything clean. Nutrition went really well and I felt good in stomach and body.<br />
<br />
Around 80 km, going fast downhill into a roundabout, a pony-tailed gentleman in front of me, realize that he is coming in too fast - he blocks his breaks, slides and crashes like 2-3 meters in front of me. I have the option to go over him or try to find a "soft" landing, BUM! Later in the goal area, a German guy called Marcus told me he saw me crash and said "it reminded me of a MotoGP crash" I think I was sliding like 10-12m on the wet asphalt - but to my surprise I had only little pain and only small scratches on the right elbow - pfew, lucky - keep pushing! Still heavy rain and so, like around km100 I am going at a fairly slow and controlled pace into a turn and my front wheel just disappears, without even touching the breaks. BUM again. Same elbow, but now also the hip and I hear the helmet slamming hard into the asphalt. This time I am in big pain and stay on the ground until some nice spectators come over to help. I am shaking in pain and cant even answer their question "Are you OK?" - wait, I am not OK ... not at all, but 25 years of skateboarding, you slam a lot. So back on the bike. Now the elbow is bleeding badly and its painful to be in the aerobars on the bad asphalt and going over bumps, so I took a painkiller, which relieved the pain slightly.<br />
Finally, 5 km before T2, the disaster completes itself, as I have a rear wheel flat. I cut up the tubular with a small cutter, but struggle too long to get the tubular off - it´s glued so hard. This was probably the moment where I gave up the fight, be it wrong or be it right. But struggling 5-6 minutes with the tire, I could see that this was just not my day. So rolled down to T2, changed and started the 42 km run.<br />
<br />
<table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEicoKDzA7RjWwsZjkEp6kx5j4ZfOo2ruWLMKDYAAPiRUudPbgT-jfnmJExE8QbPDleZm74ImMq2O2-zX4eM3qCSo_kIEa5lBEarkY8Bm6Rp6qx0817gCj-gv9g4spWsIc0l8c8wbCK6gDY/s1600/563928_416513318399170_803638985_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEicoKDzA7RjWwsZjkEp6kx5j4ZfOo2ruWLMKDYAAPiRUudPbgT-jfnmJExE8QbPDleZm74ImMq2O2-zX4eM3qCSo_kIEa5lBEarkY8Bm6Rp6qx0817gCj-gv9g4spWsIc0l8c8wbCK6gDY/s400/563928_416513318399170_803638985_n.jpg" width="480" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Andy Raelert Crashing in the same corner at 10 km/H</td></tr>
</tbody></table>
<br />
<br />
I can only say I was not too motivated, now this was my 4th Ironman (St. George, Zurich & Calella) in a row, where I was not doing too good - but at least I wanted to take some lessons on running and nutrition. Must admit it was harder than expected to maintain the planned 4:40 min/km pace, maybe slightly due to pains after the crashes. With 10 km to go, I could see that I could probably sub the 10 hours if I kept a pace just around 5:00 min/km. And so I did, finally finishing in 9:55, around 4 minutes from my personal best.<br />
<br />
Good mood though - you win some and you loose some. Motivation is already back!<br />
<br />
Cheers - ThomasThomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-28171931601766467212012-06-19T09:10:00.003+02:002012-06-19T10:49:32.673+02:00Last few weeks before Ironman FrankfurtSo now less than 3 weeks until I am racing Ironman Frankfurt and a few words on what I do differently than other years.<br />
<br />
<b>In training: </b><br />
I have definitely seen a increase in training volume the 3-4 weeks a I am now close to 20 hours a week. But its not as last year, where 2-3 very long weekly bike rides would dominate and make me dead tired. Along the "Progressive Adoption" methodology, I am still doing harder sets, with higher quality (more watts, higher heart rate), just a slight increase in hours per set and a few more sets. Now close to 14 sets per week or averaging 2 sets a day. Last week the distribution was 3 swim, 4 bike, 4 run and 2 core sets. <br />
<br />
Again, planning the week like this, I get less tired overall and recover faster than after the very long runs (above 1.5 hours) or bikes (above 4 hours). It´s easier to fit this into a daily schedule, I normally do one set early morning before works and then another set in the evening, unless its a brick set.<br />
<br />
Have agreed the tapering will only really commence about a week before the race - another positive effect of not tiring one-self with load of volumen and dead long sets.<br />
<br />
<b>Rest & eat: </b><br />
I am almost afraid of putting this on paper, just out of fear of loosing my current good "sleeping mojo", but I am sleeping like a champion at the moment. Goint to bed no later than 22.30 apparently just has a good effect on my sleeping pattern and I easily hit 8-9 hours, which is needed for better recovery. Weekends I even do a little siesta, which of course is important to show my surrounding how well I integrate to Spanish customs :)<br />
<br />
As mentioned, I dropped weight by following a strict diet some 2-5 weeks ago and was at steady 69 kg last week.With the volumes I am putting in now, I can still remain at racing weight (70 kg) while eating more carbohydrates (rice, quinoa & some pasta) and just maintaining the engines going in a healthy way that supports fast recovery. I totally cut out alcohol, which is potentially also has a positive effect on my sleep. It´s dead boring to live like a monk like this, but I can feel that it´s worth the sacrifice - so will stick to this until having a well deserved "Weisse" in Germany after the race.<br />
<br />
I have decided to opt out of going to Ironman France to cheer for many friends racing there this weekend. Its a tough call, but getting on a 9 hours exhausting tour bus ride there just seems to risky in terms of staying well in above patterns. <br />
<br />
<b>Other:</b><br />
Not much more going on really. I will race on and in same gear as in Challenge Calella. Will change tires and have a final bike tune-up before it gets sent directly to T1.<br />
Have been discussing potential race plan with Coach Aleksandar. In short I will aim for 215 watts on the bike, which should then get me safely below the 5 hours. And run around 4:35 or 4:40 to finish the marathon (theoretically) below 3h15m. <br />
<br />
Cheers and let the count down begin! ThomasThomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-67956213605805597582012-06-09T10:08:00.001+02:002012-06-19T08:31:52.672+02:00The Coffee Trick!<br />
<b><span style="font-weight: normal;">Our old friend Ronnie Reagan said: "I never drink coffee at lunch. I find it keeps me awake for the afternoon"</span></b><br />
<br />
<b><span style="font-weight: normal;">I have very few real dependencies; one would be that I like a glass of splendid Spanish red wine, but that´s beaten by far, by my addiction for a good, solid coffee in the morning. Not latte, not an espresso shot or any other fancy stuff - just a plain biggish black coffee, like the Americans like it. It´s actually difficult to find a good coffee bar in Barcelona, so I use a french press and have a grinder for the whole Starbucks beans I can get just on the corner. Or just a plain Nescafe can do the trick. </span></b><br />
<b><span style="font-weight: normal;"><br /></span></b><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgkj9eisk26axnYa-OF3rojLRLP6tR87DQmw6x_rKt29CnpGlznkSDsfll1Ew1AA9WbRbZ3RIoCfEqCMPcLGdvXLqfh5ykolrAqPjYqtB1RlAR1eCB7pmO50NzURHqojel8Em71wmGCQxA/s1600/coffee2.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgkj9eisk26axnYa-OF3rojLRLP6tR87DQmw6x_rKt29CnpGlznkSDsfll1Ew1AA9WbRbZ3RIoCfEqCMPcLGdvXLqfh5ykolrAqPjYqtB1RlAR1eCB7pmO50NzURHqojel8Em71wmGCQxA/s320/coffee2.jpg" width="249" /></a></div>
<b><span style="font-weight: normal;">I am certain that you can find loads of studies on the goods and the bads of Coffee, but for sure coffee has a medical proven positive effect on performance, both mental and physical - useful in training and racing. That´s why many products that we devour during races, such as gels and energy drinks, holds some amount of caffeine - in short it gives you a good kick to perform better.</span></b><br />
<br />
<b><span style="font-weight: normal;">However, when you are a coffeholic like me, the effect of the caffeine-based products are somehow lessened, as the body is just too used to getting this little extra kick. </span></b><br />
<br />
<b><span style="font-weight: normal;">Now, here is a little trick that will get the coffee and maybe caffeine-pills make you fly on race day: The week before the race you cut off or dramatically cut down your coffee intake. Now, that is VERY hard in the beginning. I suffered insomnia and headaches, which just again proves that I am highly addicted. You may even feel that your legs are slow and dull the week leading up to a race. But once you get that longed-for coffee on race morning it will fire you up like nothing else! </span></b><br />
<b><span style="font-weight: normal;"><br /></span></b><br />
<b><span style="font-weight: normal;">Try it before your next race, or even better, try it in training and see if works for you too! </span></b><br />
<b><span style="font-weight: normal;"><br /></span></b><br />
<b><span style="font-weight: normal;">Happy weekend - wake up and smell the coffee! Hugs T</span></b>Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-90762125733319157252012-06-06T09:12:00.003+02:002012-06-06T09:13:01.311+02:00New stuff on recovery<h3 class="post-title entry-title" itemprop="name">
</h3>
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<div class="post-body entry-content" id="post-body-4996433479522923136" itemprop="articleBody">
This is re-post that I have updated since I learned quite a lot the last 2 years and thought I´d share. </div>
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<br />
First, now training along the "progressive adaption" philosophy, I am not even near as beaten up as previous years. My average run session is maybe 45-60 minutes and bike sets tend be 2-3 hours, where I last year had weekends with 10-12 hours on the bike, which obviously leaves you with a much higher need (both time and quality) for recovery. Good news is that I am proving to be faster and stronger, and I feel that my legs are almost always recovered and ready to fire on a new quality session. Here is now 9 things I do to recover faster:<br />
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<ol>
<li><span style="font-weight: bold;">Stretch</span>
- My good Swedish friend Haakon Weibull once said "Warm-Up and
Stretching is gay"... very precise with a good Swedish accent. Some say
"nay" and some say "yay", but most people still recognize the benefits
of stretching. I spend 15-20 minutes after long trainings, working with
some pretty straight forward exercises. Girls digs boys who stretches ;)</li>
<li><span style="font-weight: bold;">Shower</span>
- may sound pretty obvious, but hit the cold water over the legs for
5-7 minutes, which has some (still unexplained) magic effect. It´s
painful and it sucks - but it works.</li>
<li><span style="font-weight: bold;">Drink</span>
- I have learned that I can drop dramatic amounts of liquid during longer rides or runs, even
when hydrating well during the day. So drink well, isotonics, coca cola
or whatever works for you. Until your pee goes transparent again!</li>
<li><span style="font-weight: bold;">Eat</span>
- as soon as possible, preferable within 20 minutes after the training
40% proteins (tuna, chicken and what not) and 60% carbs (pasta, rice og smoothies
works for me). You´d need around 1.0 - 1.3 grams of carbs per kilogram of body weight and around half of that in protein right after a long training. </li>
<li><span style="font-weight: bold;">Supplement? </span>I used to do this a lot, but this year I am leaving it out, except for a vitamin pill. If that works for the best Norwegian x-country skiers it works for me too. <span style="font-weight: bold;"> </span></li>
<li><span style="font-weight: bold;"> Compex</span>
- this electronic muscle simulator works wonders on sore muscles. It´s
fairly expensive (I got mine for 300 euros) and hurts a bit - but gets your legs back in shape in
25 minutes. Takes out the feeling of "heavy legs" which means a lot,
especially if you do back-to-back quality (short and fast) trainings!<br /><b> </b></li>
<li><b>Trigger Point Ball & Ball Roll</b><br />This one is new to me - I use it mostly on calves and hips, but works anywhere really. Apply pressure and roll over the sore areas and will release any contractures you may come a cross. It´s really simple and takes no more than 3-5 minutes a day.<br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjyz26TtngoLeUKjRzobeyhkV1GizAbH0-mG86_Yhlg3FVdg5Hfd-GwJvwdat37V8x49WhNbOwcgcxuc81yeSiO8s1nLITUgPgIUqtRIckaTE7LNEzumzroBe3i4gXYb_GsgnQGL-d5FVA/s1600/tpt-tpq-2.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="179" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjyz26TtngoLeUKjRzobeyhkV1GizAbH0-mG86_Yhlg3FVdg5Hfd-GwJvwdat37V8x49WhNbOwcgcxuc81yeSiO8s1nLITUgPgIUqtRIckaTE7LNEzumzroBe3i4gXYb_GsgnQGL-d5FVA/s320/tpt-tpq-2.jpg" width="320" /></a></li>
<li><span style="font-weight: bold;">Massage</span>
- actually this year, I am doing all fine with the Compex & Trigger Point, but will go and see <a href="http://www.fisiocerdanyola.com/" target="_blank">David Serra</a> in Cerdanyola for a pre-race tune up before the Ironman in July. </li>
<li><span style="font-weight: bold;">Rest</span>
- even though my room mate still laugh at me when I pass out on the
couch, this is the best moment of the day. Spanish people got it right
with the "Siesta" - it´s next best thing after sliced bread! Hit
Mythbusters or whatever on the old telly and sleep until some foolish
soul wakes you up. </li>
</ol>
Hope it´ll work for ya too! Enjoy... Besos - T
</div>Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-43572776921264335632012-06-01T07:33:00.002+02:002012-06-01T08:28:22.072+02:00The stuff that moves me forwardI have always been an insane gear freak. And triathlon is definitely one of the best (or worst if you want) sports go spending big time, though my affection for snowboards, rock climbing and electric guitars has taken its toll on my bank account too.<br />
<br />
Getting into triathlon some years back, I was all over the place, trying practically everything that was advertised to make me faster, stronger, lighter - or alas, just look better! But this season I have kinda narrowed in - I know my favorites now, no need to experiment. Thought I´d share a few of these with you today:<br />
<br />
<b>First - my new Asics Noosa 7 runners</b><br />
Many may know that I have tried ALL running shoes and at some point I had like 12-15 active shoes (trail, race, training, etc). I got the the Noosas 1 full size smaller than my usual 42, thanks to professional help in Endurance Sport in Copenhagen and suffered no blisters in the last 2 half Ironman races. You may, or may not like the color scheme - the Asics DS Trainer are the same shoes, but in more conservative colors.<br />
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<b>The SRM Powermeter. </b><br />
It just works (at least now it does after a trip to Germany and back), but at a 4000 euros price tag incl. the Power Control 7 computer, its a big consideration to add it to the arsenal. I can easily say that my improvements on the bike over that last 6 months has largely been due to my ability to train at the right intensities (Thanks<a href="http://www.outofbubblegum.dk/" target="_blank"> Aleksandar</a>) and measure my improvements with power. www.srm.de<br />
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<b>The Argon 18 E118:</b><br />
Not much to add - a picture says more than 1000 words, right? I was speechless the first time I saw it. This is my 4th Argon 18 bike. Really all a bike frame needs to do is:<br />
<ol>
<li>be light, stiff and produce low drag</li>
<li>hold wheels, pedals, handlebar and a seat in the most aero position you can maintain during 180km. </li>
</ol>
But this one is a beast (quoting Jeff Hammond from Argon 18) and it looks mad with Shimano Di2 and Reynolds wheels. Can´t thank Guillermo Lladó enough for hooking me up with these bikes and for always keeping the machines running. And also thanks to Pedro de Arriba for helping on bike fit. Many ask me these questions, so the bike weighs around 8.2 kg in race shape and would have a retail price tag close to <span class="st">€</span>13.000 <br />
Check www.erclanteam.com for Argon 18 sales in Spain and www.fit4bike.com for the best and friendliest bike fit, available in Spain or Denmark. <br />
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<b>The White Fusion Tri-Suit:</b><br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKySj9fH5piAWSJtI1zA1jL0OIEH0zFPGK-JyZF6dMtgH1uer6UcFKdUQWUc6pk-PdL3_t2JXSyrGDZbhNO5qVTOOaPgaEYcUv9kUbt2mb_pyVYidVZ70PYZq2qqQBnMYjL8dDPGAp9Ic/s1600/Capture.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKySj9fH5piAWSJtI1zA1jL0OIEH0zFPGK-JyZF6dMtgH1uer6UcFKdUQWUc6pk-PdL3_t2JXSyrGDZbhNO5qVTOOaPgaEYcUv9kUbt2mb_pyVYidVZ70PYZq2qqQBnMYjL8dDPGAp9Ic/s400/Capture.JPG" width="256" /></a></div>
If you have been to a triathlon race in Denmark for the last few years, you would recognize the White Fusion Suits as the Danish national dress. Danes are VERY aware of product quality and also their style, hence its no wonder why Fusion is doing great. No other suits give me that comfort and quality needed on race day, and then its actually black... where it needs to be black.<br />
www.fusion.dk<br />
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Further - I run on Clif Bar and GU fuel. Blueseventy Helix Wetsuit, Giro Selector Helmut and Oakley Radar Sunglasses. <br />
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Those were the safe few. Feel very free to ask questions to above or to any other gear that I am using in racing or training, either here or on Facebook.<br />
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But remember what Lance Armstrong says: "It´s not about the bike". <br />
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<br />Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-51997448684237978132012-05-28T08:20:00.000+02:002012-05-28T08:20:04.629+02:00Half Ironman Challenge Calella - Fem un homenatge!My first ever triathlon was in the Half Ironman Challenge Calella, with my homies Toni & Ferran, back in May 2009 - so many things has happened and I have learned so much and enjoyed every step of it. This day we are all there again, but now with so much more friends - triathlon is really like a nice family and it makes me extremely happy to see friends racing and cheering on the side. And of course racing on home turf is emotional and you want to do good - and so we did! <br /><br />The morning was sunny and calm - a quick dip and off in the 3rd AG wave in the flat, coldish and salty waters of Costa Brava. Quick found a good pace and cadence. For the first time I was swimming in competition with the Garmin 910XT HRM, which monitors performance in all 3 sports and even times your transitions. First new and very valid data is, that I was swimming at 70 strokes per minute (up from 55 SPM) - which is the fruit of the swim technique work I did with Aleksandar, when he was here in Barcelona a month ago. Now, to me, a higher cadence theoretically makes you faster, but also helps you use stronger muscle groups (shorter stroke) and actually works great in open water. Maybe thats why you always see pros with very high cadence - all the way to 80-90 SPM. The swim was (again) a bit longer - some mentioned 2050m, but made landfall after 31 minutes, which is (again) a personal best - so good to see another good improvement in the swim and I still feel I could push slightly more. <br />
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The bike was set to be epic - the main road is N-II which is honestly my favorite training grounds. Except for the bumpy (speed bumps) entry to/from Calella, where people crash and drop bottles, it was to tuck into position and push the agreed 244 watts and enjoy the show. No winds, so flew out at around 39.5 km/m at 244W, turned around and to my surprise now had a slight tail wind, so coming home at speeds above 45 km/h was just amazing. I had a Basque and French guys on my wheel on all flats, who took turns to blow by me on the small hills. I later took over the Basque on the run and I never saw the Frenchie again. Don't push to hard on the hills - it´ll burn your legs and fill them with lactic acid, which you will pay for on the run! Entering T2 after 2h13m on the bike - another PB and 40.4 km/h on average. Turned out to be the 2nd best bike split amongst all age groupers (non-professionals) of the day. Only 16 pros went faster on the bike!<br />
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My hope was to go under 1h30m on the run, and felt really good running at the right goal pace of 4:15 min/km until km16. Nutrition worked well and I tried to push as much as I could from km18, but I kept loosing a bit of time, so ended up running 21.6 km in 1h32m, fairly OK after a good effort on the bike. I would still like to run better, as I can see the people I swim and bike with go around 4:00 min/km. Nutrition worked perfect all day and although it got quite warm I never had any stomach issues as I have had in the past on hot days. Finished in 4h20m - new PB on the distance, which I think we can approve, considering very little tapering plus the slightly longer swim and run!<br />
Finished 4th in my age group. And 12th position across all age groupers! <br />
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Now 6 weeks to IM Frankfurt - looking forward to evaluating the race with coach and start really preparing for this seasons A-race! Cheers T <br />
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<br />Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-6104883556438082752012-05-04T07:19:00.003+02:002012-05-04T07:20:40.060+02:00Tuning Up - Lighter is better"You Big Heap of Meat" - was the rude outburst from coach Aleksandar, when he saw me in Speedos before a swim training, some 3 weeks back. No offense taken, of course he was joking, but also opening my eyes, that:<br />
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<li>The heavy sets of strength-swim during the winter had built an above-normal muscle mass on my upper body, arms, shoulders and chest. </li>
<li>My racing weight would potentially be way lower than the 72-73 kg that I have always been aiming for - the level where my last belly fat seems to disappear. </li>
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So currently aiming to drop from around 73 kg to approx. <b>69 kg</b>, which should be feasible in the next 3-4 weeks leading up to the Half Ironman, Challenge Maresme by the end of May.<br />
Various calculators on the web can tell you, that dropping weight will make you faster, except maybe during swimming where the extra body fat makes you float a bit better. But on the bike and on especially on the run, low weight converts into faster races.<br />
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For a Marathon I have seen predictions that running 4-5 kg lighter will make you (theoretically) 8-10 mintues faster, which is HUGE in a world where we are basically chasing grams on the bike and minutes on an Ironman. <br />
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In the next post I will reveal a few little tricks to manage weight and what I apply to drop weight in a healthy way - It´s simply really. Wish me luck<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Macca (left) is or was known to be the heaviest ever Ironman Champion at almost 80 kgs.</td></tr>
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<br />Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-55120173820120826732012-05-02T13:40:00.002+02:002012-05-02T13:47:01.711+02:00Finally a flawless execution - Banyoles B DistanceAlmost recovered with the knee after the crash in Valencia, the last few months has been a bit more race specific. Banyoles is the Catalan championship in the "B-distance" (2200m swim, 80km bike and 20km run) and a local classic, that normally attracts the best age groupers. <br />
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The swim was cut a bit short to 1650m due to 14 degree water temperature (as in Valencia) but it actually felt OK. Amazing to have Blanca there and give me warmth before the cold swim. Plunged right into it and bruised my knees on the bottom - I simply don´t understand why they insist on a "jump-start" instead of a water start.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Banyoles Swim Start</td></tr>
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Well - off we go and actually felt really well. No anxiety and for the first time (probably ever) I felt swimming was great. I kept pushing all the way and I could definitely feel that the effect of many strength swims had me stronger now. I think I could have gone bit faster for this distance, but came out in 26 minutes for 1700m, which would be PR - very nice!<br />
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Bit slow in T1 as I had issues coming out of the wetsuit being quite cold now. But happily off to the bike and the sun was shining. I must congratulate the organizers in Banyoles. This race is so simple, yet so perfect. There´s a few aid stations and guiding is done very properly. All races should be learning from this. On the downside the race is infamous for drafting and though the Catalan Tri Federation was present as marshalls, they apparently let people draft at will. I had a group of at least 20 bikes in front of me most of the way, riding light roadbikes on the hilly course, and then shaping a nice little group on the flats and downhills - drafting like this is a disgrace and I am happy I am not racing for neither fame or money in this game. <br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Flying on the E118 with a disc, which maybe wasn´t optimal for this hilly course. <br />
Thanks TriEnjoy for the photo and to Guillermo for tuning the rig before the race! </td></tr>
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I was racing without watts (the SRM is on 3rd weeks in Germany for repair), but had agreed on a tight HR range from
162-164 and kept myself there, except on the climbs. Again, I feel that I
had a bit more in the legs and was some 3-4 minutes from the fastest
bikes on the day over the 75km. Not bad, but I am sure I would be able to manage my effort better with watts. <br />
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On the run, I set out at 4:25 min/km. I have been injured in the knee since the Valencia crash so haven´t run as much and as fast as I had hoped for. However, legs were good and I moved closer to 4:20 until around 12km, took a gel and another caffein tablet which gave me a boost of energy and I managed to stay at 4:25 until around 17 or 18 km, where I started pushing harder. I ran all the way through and it felt good to have the extra energy to push harder the last 2-3 km, something I never had in the past. Again, getting the pace right is so cruzial. Thanks to coach Aleksandar, who again hit the spot perfectly on planning my race and paces, which made it fairly easy to execute without feeling any real highs or lows during the day. Overall probably the best race I have ever put together. Felt I could go a bit faster on all 3 sports and finishing like 10 minutes from top10 is approved I guess. <br />
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Next up is Half Ironman in Challenge Maresme on the 27th of May. Main aim here is to run better (maybe 4:15?) and race below 70 kg, which means I must drop 3.5 kg before then - not impossible at all. Two months to Ironman Frankfurt!Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-57550241991977268772012-03-05T08:56:00.001+01:002012-03-07T08:00:40.569+01:00Prepare to be surprised - Half Ironman ValenciaSo, finally time for the first real race in 2012. After good quality trainings the last few months I felt well prepared and potentially better & stronger than ever, which now had to stand the test. We were around 20 known friends and foes from Barcelona, so jolly times on the trip 400km south of Barcelona. The course would be flat and the water cold. Coach Aleksandar sent me the plan for the days before the race for race prep and strategy laid out for swim, bike & run. I must say, it felt great to have this one-pager with advice on how to act on race day, the hard part of course, was to execute it right!<br />
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<b>Swim: </b><br />
I guess we were around 200 AGs in my wave in an ice-cold water start. I made a slight mistake of starting a bit close the the ropes and got squeezed in between the (usual) frantic swimmers. Got off well, but quickly realized that the neoprene cap (meant to keep my head warm) strap around my chin, was strangulating me and in the water I could hear and feel that it kept me from breathing unconstrained. So spent maybe some 60 seconds fixing it and eventually gave up and was a bit out of breath, but bearable. I never really found a good pair of legs to draft on and found good rhythm after only 700-800m. Exit in 32:48, which is OK, as I learned that the swim was actually 2200m, so absolutely my best 70.3 swim split ever. Would compare to 28m30s on a 1900m course. I never felt tired, kept a good high and easy cadence and believe I could have pushed a bit more or kept this pace even longer.<br />
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<b>Bike:</b><br />
Coming out of the water my hands and face was so cold I could hardly get my wetsuit off and had to ask my neighbor for help.The bike plan was to stick to the 242 Watts as a goal pace. The circuit was flat but extremely windy. Further we passed what felt as at least 50+ roundabouts and the asphalt in most places was extremely bad. But hey, who cares when you are shooting after watts, right?<br />
I quickly shot up to an average on 240w, but honestly had a hard time maintaining it due to many breaks in roundabouts and other riders going left and right in the now even tougher wind. At times I was going completely sideways to keep balance with the disc wheel. Eventually, I was hitting around 50 km/h and rode into a small chicane with dirt ditches on each side, lost the grip in some sand on the road and hurled into the road side, only to see a dried-out river coming up 10-15m below. I literally jumped or tried to and in the air I recall thinking "man, I hope I land before that riera (river bed)", which I did. Bruises on shoulders, legs and cut on left knee. Some 5-6 contestants stopped and looked horrified as I picked my self up, dusted of blood and dirt and got back in the saddle to check that the bike could at least still run. Not a tea party, right? Scratches on the helmet proves that I got away from the crash with some luck. From here it was just hard headwind, shitty asphalt and quite some pains, but made it home in 2 hours 32 minutes, which was the 4th best bike split among almost 1000 age groupers on the day. Not bad, after the crash and coming wrong out of at least 2 roundabouts. Normalized power for the best part of the ride was 239w, but I have to learn to push harder in headwind, since the opposite tailwind makes in hard to keep the effort. Further the many unnatural breaks meant that it was a somewhat interval effort, stopping and starting a lot. Very happy with the overall bike result (thanks Aleksandar), my position on the bike (thanks Guillermo & Pedro) and that I kept it going with cuts and bruises everywhere (thanks 30 years of skateboarding). Guillermo did the 2nd best bike split of the day only 52 seconds in front of me, and eventually went on to win his age group. Good start on his road back to Kona this year! <br />
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<b>Run:</b><br />
The plan here was to stick to a 4:25 min/km pace, which I initially (pre-race) felt was to slow<b>, </b>an opinion I was fast to change. Biking at 242w is right at the limit of my current physical abilities and has been established as a 85% of my FTP tests (285w), and leaves only right enough juice to make it through 21 km run with some grinding and deep digging. Hitting the run course I spent the first km "finding my legs", which worked OK and I quickly hit 4:25 with no big effort. Left knee hurt a lot, but it definitely felt as if I could keep this pace home. I had a difficult time bending the knee, which meant I have to stray away from a good (new pose-based) running technique, around km10 the pain was almost unbearable but kept the pace almost until km15 (2 laps) where I was somewhat forced to stop. Considering that this was after all only a "training", I did not really feel like pushing it much harder. A bit bummed out walking until Alfonsina picked me up and I ran with her home in 1h53m. <br />
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All in all many new things learned. Nutrition plan worked as planned I felt fairly good throughout the best part of the race, except for the pain. Thanks to all for cheering and congrats to all finishers and again to Guillermo for his amazing win and to Alex for 2nd in his age group and a powerful run!<br />
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“Expect the best, plan for the worst, and prepare to be surprised.”</div>
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Hugs - Thomas </div>Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-84218819364632565502012-01-22T10:11:00.001+01:002012-01-22T10:19:27.126+01:00Training on the road?The next few weeks are gonna be hectic in terms of traveling for work. I will be visiting Milan a few times, then London and finally Istanbul. Business travel is definitely not easy to combine with Ironman training. Apart from being away from your bike and your pool, the hours working while away always seems to be more intensive and combined with massive company dinners (or even night life), these weeks are challenging, though not impossible.<br />
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First, I always look for hotel options with a decent fitness center, a pool or grounds to run (thanks Google Maps) - right now Milan is at hard subzero degrees, so I´m ruling out running outdoor. Basically all you need is a treadmill and potentially a static bike. <br />
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Use your global network to get info on good pools or trails. Maybe you have a friend in Italy, who can guide you to a good pool or awesome runs, around or out of town.<br />
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Lately I have picked up <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=eb7hEskZDYc" target="_blank">a jump rope</a> - you would be amazed how fast this challenging little thing can tire you down, especially the calves. Further it teaches you coordination and balance. Hey, it worked for Ali - it´ll work for you too. And it´s easier and lighter to bring than your 20 kg Kettlebell. <br />
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Sticking to a good diet is difficult while on the road. For some reason, business dinners always tend to be mighty big, full of processed calories and loads of wine. In the business world it is (for some odd reason) still looked a bit down upon, if you order a Cesar salad, while your colleagues feast on Foie Gras and Creme Brule! There are no excuses, and the food will be amazing - but I will do my best to stick to less intake and still enjoy!<br />
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<br />Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-42025808952513336542012-01-20T08:54:00.001+01:002012-01-20T08:58:33.295+01:00What? Teach an old dog new tricks?Oh yeah - so I promised to talk a bit on improving running technique. Actually, around 2 years ago I did an effort, watched some YouTube and figured that land forefoot was more efficient than landing on the heel, which indeed is very true - and to some extend that got me slightly faster. <br />
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However, filming a bit with coach Aleksandar, made him burst into stuff like "Your technique really stinks - I mean, that is really bad". I was absolutely still hitting the ground somewhat in front of my center of gravity, I pushed my chest forward as if I tried to get to some imaginary finish line first - but worst of all was that my lagging leg (the one behind) was really hanging way behind me, which got me completely our of balance. <br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEis5nOTrPFDpX5hgJ8Qoq6JwFrI1OEdmcZYcd2mcc8ymt8_hr_I9OZPAyPB0tuxBa1S84h3epRpv16d1lc5TeOuEjkA-pk035DMW4Afol0mvhzgR1cA27cPc0GlHajyiA3NdAYolJgCId8/s1600/Lagging+Leg.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="241" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEis5nOTrPFDpX5hgJ8Qoq6JwFrI1OEdmcZYcd2mcc8ymt8_hr_I9OZPAyPB0tuxBa1S84h3epRpv16d1lc5TeOuEjkA-pk035DMW4Afol0mvhzgR1cA27cPc0GlHajyiA3NdAYolJgCId8/s400/Lagging+Leg.JPG" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Not how my lagging leg (right) is hanging way behind me at impact</td></tr>
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With a good, or at least better, running technique your point of impact should be right below or slightly behind your center of gravity. Which means that you basically needs to move less mass (yes your body weight) over the point of impact and hence, forward movement will be need less effort, which again means that you move faster - I guess that´s what we are all looking for.<br />
You seek to eliminate all movements or activity in each running step, that does not support forward propulsion. <br />
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So - Aleksandar has developed these <a href="http://outofbubblegum.dk/out-of-bubblegums-9-skridt-til-et-bedre-lob/" target="_blank">9 steps to better running technique</a>, somewhat inspired (though he will probably refuse) by the Pose Running Techniques. The idea is to get from one pose to the next pose, as fast as possible, which means you need to pick up your lagging leg faster or earlier.<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh2dOfVBOajVWHRgPnOxgkJITQn35_kYvxasqDZIp1OV1GXrkNMAMksWX3hRE0e5FgQ-edZrA48PgOE-cXluYHQxuAWSM1iG5PP9coJBRL0ok_K_ziIjZJ6ptmqHljK5SzlOvhK8jluxdk/s1600/Capture.JPG" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="268" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh2dOfVBOajVWHRgPnOxgkJITQn35_kYvxasqDZIp1OV1GXrkNMAMksWX3hRE0e5FgQ-edZrA48PgOE-cXluYHQxuAWSM1iG5PP9coJBRL0ok_K_ziIjZJ6ptmqHljK5SzlOvhK8jluxdk/s400/Capture.JPG" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Here - at impact (right foot), my lagging leg (left) is in a much better position to fire again and already moving forward</td><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;"></td><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;"><br /></td></tr>
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After a few weeks of implementing this, the results have been astonishing. I am surpsied how these 9 steps actually starts being a natural part of my run. And I frankly feel I run much easier, slightly faster (this of course takes a bit more than a few weeks) - my legs are not so "banged-out" after longer runs. It´s well worth the effort- trust me on that! <br />
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If you are in Denmark, Aleksandar offers these <a href="http://www.pulsslag.dk/" target="_blank">free Shoot Out sessions,</a> where he takes people through the techniques. In most other mayor cities you can find <a href="http://posetech.com/" target="_blank">Pose Running</a> coaches who can teach you the techniques. And of course, are you in Barcelona - let´s just go running :D<br />
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Thanks Aleksandar for the great advice here - this will sure have a big impact on how I will run further on, avoiding injuries and hopefully keep me running for many more years! Cheers <br />
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<br />Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-67309568049113362092012-01-14T10:19:00.000+01:002012-01-14T10:33:10.638+01:00Hey Ho - Let´s Go!<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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OK - so 2012 has finally kicked in, which feels great. Spent a few weeks over New Years on Lanzarote working volume and having fun times in a warmer, though tougher climate - I still can´t figure how you can do a 5-hour round trip on the bike and have that darn hard wind in your face all the time. <br />
Anyhow, here´s an update on 2012 for me - read and weep:<br />
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<b>2012 Dreams, Goals & Plans </b><br />
So - starting from the top, Hawaii is still the biggest dream. It´s hard for me to put that down in words, but I want that so, so bad - enough said! I learned so much last year, that I want to put into action, improve and just have fun. In the end, that´s what it all is about, right? Further I feel that I have a huge amount of support surrounding me, which is amazing! <br />
My key IM-race this year is Ironman Frankfurt the 8th of July, which offered 100 entry tickets or slots to Hawaii, but cut it down to 75 now. This potentially (or actually literally) means that I need to race in 9h20m or faster to get even close to qualify, at least top 15 in my age group in European Championship. So overall the plan is to train better and race harder. I will be doing 3-4 Half Ironman during spring time. Expect to see me in Banyoles, Terres d´Ebro and Half Maresme, with a strong preference for the great races here in Catalunya and to avoid travelling too much!<br />
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<b>New Team - Where is the Limit? </b><br />
The WITL-boys invited me to their team, which is just fantastic - nothing less. These folks are the people who originally got me hooked on triathlon (Thanks again, Josef), has a pure and strong passion in everything they do, and I share their philosophy on non-profit and just happy-go-lucky-attitude around building this club. Already after 2-3 months we are almost 400 members, amongst which many are good friends; Pep, Toni, Josef, Ferran & Ferran & Ferran and I daily meet new inspiring training partners! I think this can go really far and the team has my full support - we will not take any prisoners!<br />
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<b>New Philosophy, Concepts & Sensations</b><br />
So - I already posted around my collaboration with <a href="http://outofbubblegum.dk/">Out Of Bubblegum</a> and coach Aleksandar. We have now had around 8 weeks in the field and I feel quite some changes in my whole set-up and physical and mental well being:<br />
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<li><b>I swim stronger:</b> Instead of doing longer, boring sets, I now work more drills and much more intervals - its insane how tired I am after 2500m sets, burning feelings in the shoulders, and physically I can see that I have put on some swim-muscle, without moving much weights this year. My legs are much better, which means I move smoother in the water and helped by a higher cadence, I just move faster from wall to wall. </li>
<li><b>I bike on fresh legs: </b>Last year I was so exhausted at this time of the year, after long hauls on Lanzarote and trying to keep up with the tough crew in the Argon 18 Mafia, which eventually spiraled into over-trained legs and exhaust. Now I do shorter stuff (1-2 hours), loads of intervals enabled by the SRM watts and I can track that my improvements since September have been dramatic. I will be fun to actually start competing again to see if the legs can hold through 90 or 180 km, but battling the Finnish National Team on Lanzarote gave some good signs that this is actually working.</li>
<li><b>I run easy:</b> During Christmas I spent some days working with Aleksandar in freezing Copenhagen to improve my running technique. Aleksander talks about 9 steps to better running, somewhat inspired by the Pose Running Techniques. I will post a bit more on this shortly, but I already now feel that I am moving faster and easier forward. It´s honestly amazing that you can teach an old dog new tricks with quite few pointers which indeed makes loads of sense. <b><br /></b></li>
<li><b>I feel much better: </b>Obviously all of above makes me feel in better shape, which is a very fine feeling. But apart from that I sleep like a champion (less stress in the body from long trainings maybe?)<b>, </b>I have more time to do other stuff,<b> </b>things are great at work and I am madly in love <3. </li>
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Tune in soon - there´s some interesting news on gear, that I can´t wait to share! Hugs T<b></b><br />
<b><br /></b>Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-49495087090037584412011-11-06T20:04:00.000+01:002011-11-06T20:10:46.931+01:00Collserola Trail Running - Playing with Fire!So darn - the autumn finally came to Barcelona and we´re having some hyggelig days here with rain, which kept us from hitting the bikes as planned. Instead I hooked up with Toni, Albert and Guillermo for running in the mountains above Barcelona - excellent company- screw the rain! As Albert explains in the video below we played with fire, which made it a long day with 24 km, 2 hours 15 min and 1100 meter of climbing. I feel like much, much more trail running this winter - will try to look out for roots on the track ....
<object width="480" height="360"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/3egPEspuhzw?version=3&hl=en_US&rel=0"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/3egPEspuhzw?version=3&hl=en_US&rel=0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="480" height="360" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object>Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-83090353832411954562011-10-19T10:03:00.001+02:002011-10-19T10:18:13.814+02:00Barcelona Boiler - Testing on the Rollers<br />
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So time was up for a first test on the bike and the command was 30 minutes warm-up on the turbo trainer and then 20 minutes full throttle in what is known as the Functional Threshold Power Test (FTP). FTP is the highest mean average power or pace you can maintain for one hour. So basically this test is giving you an estimate of your maximal output during one hour at full gas, but for testing purposes you can estimate the same during 20 minutes and then subtract 5% of the power produces. Based on this test you can set your training zones and even estimate the power you optimally need to deliver for a successful Ironman Bike leg.<br />
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Have to admit I was still a bit tired after the London trip - not so much all the pints, but walking and standing up a lot made the legs feel heavy on Sunday & Monday. Further, testing with the power meter and uploading this to Trainingpeaks means full transparency on each darned little move you make on the bike. No way you can hide anything for Coach Aleks, even though he is 2000km away.This is intimidating in a nice way and works as motivation of course! Will write a bit on Trainingpeaks.com (TP) one of these days. <br />
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Barcelona is still experiencing a warm Indian summer and I set the AC to blow cold wind onto the bike and my back. Off we go with some isotonic and a gel. Last time I tested around 290W on an uphill, so thought this must be around the level where I should start out. My heartrate quickly blew up to 175bpm and it was boiling hot. Kept the average around 280 for first 7-8 minutes and then ran into a crisis and had to lower expectations and power somewhat. Final averages were 254W and then 175bpm - check the graphs from TP below. <br />
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<b>Conclusions:</b><br />
Testing on the trainer is definitely something you have to learn - managing and timing power over the test period. It is very precise and you can keep the output very stable as there are no external factors (wind, hills, etc). I need more ventilation - big blower to be purchased today. I am no big fan of indoor training, but once you actually have strong purpose, things get easier and time flies. Definitely room for improvements on the bike test here - will test again with a 2 weeks frequency and this is a great way to measure progress.Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-13564845475503806302011-10-17T22:13:00.001+02:002011-10-17T22:14:01.644+02:00Your Sister Wants her Shorts Back!!!!Just what a real Ironman thinks while training on Diagonal. WARP SPEED - ENGAGE !!!!
<iframe width="480" height="360" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/quwhg8_3N2s" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1301753210100255416.post-41563749529931658752011-10-17T12:45:00.000+02:002011-10-17T12:45:37.018+02:00Argon 18 on TourmaletArgon 18 boys on 3 peaks in the Pyreness - good, sunny and tough day at the office.<br />
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<iframe width="480" height="360" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/SJSe_U96Jmc" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>Thomas Rohdehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09256624653716886436noreply@blogger.com0